Results for 'discourses of memory'

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  1.  11
    The discourse of memory: a bakhtinian essay from Infância and São Bernardo by Graciliano Ramos.Gilberto de Castro - 2011 - Bakhtiniana 6 (1):79 - 94.
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  2.  10
    Politics of memory, urban space and the discourse of counterhegemonic commemoration: a discourse-ethnographic analysis of the ‘Living Memorial’ in Budapest’s ‘Liberty Square’.Natalia Krzyżanowska - 2023 - Critical Discourse Studies 20 (5):540-560.
    This study analyses of the Living Memorial: a counter-monumental installation located since 2014 in the highly contested Szabadság (‘Liberty’) Square in central Budapest, Hungary. The focus on the LM allows showcasing it as a unique type of commemorative installation that not only contests the current Hungarian top-down, hegemonic narrations and practices of memory but also counteracts the country’s politicised and ideologised narrations of the past. The LM is explored as a dialogical ‘nexus’ of, on the one hand, individual, lived (...)
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  3.  15
    The Shaping of an American Islamic Discourse: A Memorial to Fazlur Rahman.Asma Afsaruddin, Earle H. Waugh & Frederick M. Denny - 2000 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 120 (4):679.
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  4.  7
    Memory discourses and critical scientific history. On the specificity of modern historical discourses.Roman Zymovets - 2022 - Filosofska Dumka (Philosophical Thought) 2:108-124.
    The word «history» can always be understood in two different meanings: as what happened in the past and as a story about the past. One and the same past can be described in different ways. The gap between historical events and representations of these events determines the diversity of historical discourses. Shifting the focus of the philosophy of history from identifying the con- ditions for the possibility of historical knowledge to the analysis of the process of historiography reflects an (...)
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  5. Gender, power, and historical memory: Discourses of Serrano resistance.Ana Maria Alonso - 1992 - In Judith Butler & Joan Wallach Scott (eds.), Feminists Theorize the Political. Routledge.
     
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  6.  12
    Figures of Memory: From the Muses to Eighteenth-Century British Aesthetics.Zsolt Komáromy - 2011 - Bucknell University Press.
    This book affects a rapprochement between memory studies and eighteenth-century aesthetics with the aim of modifying received views on the role and fate of memory in the history of criticism. It argues that the philosophical problems characterizing conceptualizations of memory unsettle its opposition to the imagination and explain its relation to literary discourse. Moving from the Muses through Plato and Descartes to works by Pope, Addison, Gerard, and Kames, the book traces these problems through various "figures" representing (...)
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  7.  22
    Discourse of the postgeneration: Remembrance and identity of the descendants of the perpetrators and the victims of the holocaust.Julija Matejic - 2012 - Filozofija I Društvo 23 (3):78-90.
    Ispitujuci ulogu porodice u procesu intergeneracijskog/transgeneracijskog prenosenja traume i secanja, rad pokusava da odgovori na pitanje na koji nacin suocavanje sa neprozivljenom prosloscu utice na zivote potomaka neposrednih pocinilaca i zrtava holokausta, odnosno, na formiranje identiteta tzv. postgeneracije? Sto je vremenska distanca u odnosu na Drugi svetski rat veca, i sto je broj onih sa neposrednim iskustvom i secanjem manji, termini kao sto su pamcenje i sec?anje poceli su da gube svoje ustaljeno znacenje. Kako je istrazivanje pokazalo, i pored odsustva (...)
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  8.  3
    Phenomenology and pathography of memory.Pio Colonnello - 2019 - [Milan, Italy?]: Mimesis.
    The concept of memory has always been a crucial topic in philosophical discourse. This book re-traces the thought of major philosophers such as Edmund Husserl, Paul Ricoeur, Hannah Arendt, Karl Jaspers, William James, José Luis Borges and Sigmund Freud to provide an in-depth exploration around several aspects of this timely issue. How is a memory formed? How can we bring into existence what has sunk into oblivion? What is the role of our instincts and inner drives in the (...)
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  9.  9
    Discourses of collective remembering: contestation, politics, affect.Tommaso M. Milani & John E. Richardson - 2023 - Critical Discourse Studies 20 (5):459-476.
    This article introduces the key issues and themes that the articles in the Special Issue aim to apply and develop in greater detail. First, we argue that the field of collective remembering can be conceived as a site of active contestation, rather than simply a means of communicating a historic past or our deontic position in relation to these pasts. Approaching collective remembering as a Lieu de Dispute allows us, in turn, to foreground three consequential dimensions of remembrance, which the (...)
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  10.  17
    Twenty-first century discourses of American lynching.Ersula J. Ore - 2023 - Critical Discourse Studies 20 (5):508-523.
    In the last 25 years increased violence against Black Americans by police and white vigilantes has led to a resurgence in lynching discourse. This article examines two strains of twenty-first century lynching discourse in America with attention to questions of historical erasure and racial appropriation. The move from justificatory discourses of lynching to rhetoric stigmatizing its practice led to two distinct discursive forms: a rhetoric of memorialization that reads Black women as part of the lynching archive and a rhetoric (...)
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  11.  6
    Amnesia I: Neuroanatomicand clinical issues.Localization Of Memory - 2000 - In Martha J. Farah & Todd E. Feinberg (eds.), Patient-Based Approaches to Cognitive Neuroscience. MIT Press.
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  12. Norman M. Weinberger.Forms Of Memory - 1990 - In J. McGaugh, Jerry Weinberger & G. Lynch (eds.), Brain Organization and Memory. Guilford Press.
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  13.  62
    Towards a Phenomenology of Memory and Forgetting.Alexandre Dessingué - 2011 - Études Ricoeuriennes / Ricoeur Studies 2 (1):168-178.
    Differences and trends in the discourse of memory in France have been consistent since the publication by Henri Bergson of Matter and Memory in 1896. In History, Memory and Forgetting published in 2000, Ricœur’s approach goes further than Bergson, Durkheim and Halbwachs. The memory issue in Ricœur is closely linked to a “hermeneutics of the self” that he already introduced in Oneself as Another in 1990. It seems that the traditional paradigm between individual and collective (...) has been replaced by the affirmation of the dialogical nature of memory related to the dialogical nature of being a self and an other. (shrink)
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  14.  47
    A hermeneutical sketch of memory and the immemorial.Jon Utoft Nielsen - 2011 - Continental Philosophy Review 44 (4):401-416.
    In one of his more recent works, Paul Ricoeur attempts to re-instate the philosophical discussion of memory at the very center of a more general discourse on human existence. In his exposition, Ricoeur relies upon what he himself characterizes as a phenomenology of memory. It is the aim of the present article to supplement the phenomenological account of memory discussed by Ricoeur with a hermeneutics of memory conscious of its own limitations. Such a hermeneutical supplement would (...)
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  15.  8
    Recalling ‘The Scent of Memory’: Celebrating 100 Issues of Feminist Review.Nirmal Puwar & Irene Gedalof - 2012 - Feminist Review 100 (1):1-5.
    In her 1999 article ‘The Scent of Memory’, Avtar Brah maps the ways in which gendered, classed and racialised identities and subjectivities are produced in the diaspora space of Britain. ‘The Scent of Memory’ begins, repeatedly returns to and ends with the figure of a mother — Jean, a white English woman in the Southall of the 1970s and 1980s. One way of reading this article is as a series of interruptions, each of which allows us to see (...)
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  16. The making of memory: the politics of archives, libraries and museums in the construction of national consciousness.Richard Harvey Brown & Beth Davis-Brown - 1998 - History of the Human Sciences 11 (4):17-32.
    An archive is a repository - that is, a place or space in which materials of historic interest or social significance are stored and ordered. A national archive is the storing and ordering place of the collective memory of that nation or people(s). This article provides a brief his torical/theoretical introduction to the politics of the archive in late capi talist societies and discusses this politics of memory via the performance of ordinary daily activities of librarians and archivists. (...)
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  17.  7
    The Scent of Memory: Strangers, Our Own, and Others.Avtar Brah - 1999 - Feminist Review 61 (1):4-26.
    Using, as a point of departure, Tim Lott's recent autobiography where he attempts to make sense of his mother's suicide of 1988 through a reconstruction of his family genealogy, this article tries to map the production of gendered, classed, and racialized subjects and subjectivity in west London. It addresses the tension between Lott's discourse of his own white working-class boyhood during the 1970s where questions of ‘race’ are all but absent, and the racialized ‘commonsense’ that pervades the interviews with other (...)
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  18.  9
    The role of memory in human life. On the basis of the ideas of the twentieth century philosophers and thinkers.Katarzyna Olewińska - 2021 - Philosophical Discourses 3:53-61.
    In The Sound and the Fury William Faulkner writes: “Time is dead as long as it is being clicked off by little wheels; only when the clock stops, does time come to life.” The following words relate to the role of memory frames in human life. They also begin the analysis of the ideas of twentieth and twenty-first century philosophers such as Henri Bergson, Martin Heidegger, Paul Ricoeur and David Farrell Krell. Even though there is a strict reference to (...)
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  19.  7
    Book review: Mariane Achugar, What We Remember: The Construction of Memory in Military Discourse. Amsterdam/philadelphia, PA: John Benjamins, 2008, 246 pp. [REVIEW]Ángel Rodríguez Gallardo - 2010 - Discourse Studies 12 (2):273-275.
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  20.  1
    Book review: Mariana Achugar, what we remember: The construction of memory in military discourse. Amsterdam: John benjamins, 2008, 246 pp. [REVIEW]Natasha Azarian Ceccato - 2009 - Discourse and Communication 3 (4):451-453.
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  21.  15
    Book Review: Discourses of Jewish Identity in Twentieth-Century France. [REVIEW]Ellen S. Fine - 1995 - Philosophy and Literature 19 (2):378-379.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Discourses of Jewish Identity in Twentieth-Century FranceEllen S. FineDiscourses of Jewish Identity in Twentieth-Century France, edited by Alan Astro; Yale French Studies 265pp. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1994, $17.00.Ever since France became the first European country to grant Jews equal rights as citizens with the enactment of the Declaration of the Rights of Man in 1791, the question of identity has been a central preoccupation of (...)
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  22.  3
    Activating memories in interviews: an instance of collaborative discourse construction.Claude Sionis & Andreea Fratila - 2006 - Discourse Studies 8 (3):369-399.
    The article attempts to account for some conversational strategies for the thematic construction of discourse in a 30,000 word corpus of contemporary oral French. The sub-genre studied is that of the ‘memory-activation interview’, a speech situation, or ‘activity-type’ in which dialogues and meaning are co-constructed with the purpose of reviving memories. The general analytical framework is that of ‘interactional sociolinguistics’ as defined by Schiffrin, in which the more specific aspects of ratification, legitimization and modes of contribution are redefined and (...)
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  23.  21
    ‘Free men we stand under the flag of our land’: a transitivity analysis of African anthems as discourses of resistance against colonialism.Isaac N. Mwinlaaru & Mark Nartey - 2022 - Critical Discourse Studies 19 (5):556-572.
    Recent studies on colonial discourse have demonstrated that the speeches of freedom activists in colonial Africa served as sites of resistance. One key text type that has, however, been neglected in the critical literature on the discourse of emancipation is the national anthem of colonised states. To fill this gap, the present study examines the discursive enactment of resistance in the anthems of former British colonies in Africa, focusing on the transitivity framework in systemic functional linguistics. Semantic and structural parallelisms (...)
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  24. Mneme, Anamnesis and Mimesis: The Function of Narrative in Paul Ricœur’s Theory of Memory.Ridvan Askin - 2009 - FIAR: Forum for Inter-American Research 1 (2).
    Paul Ricœur develops his phenomenological-hermeneutical theory of memory in his seminal Memory, History, Forgetting, and several preliminary studies to his monumental book.[1] As its title indicates, the monograph treats memory in conjunction with forgetting and history, placed within a wider horizon of what could be termed an ethics of forgiving. For the purpose of this article I will focus on the problems of memory and forgetting, ignoring history for the most part. Similarly, I do not explicitly (...)
     
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  25.  6
    The acquisition of memory by interview questioning: Holocaust re-membering as category-bound activity.Sheryl Perlmutter Bowen & Mariaelena Bartesaghi - 2009 - Discourse Studies 11 (2):223-243.
    In this discourse analysis of how memory acquires and is acquired in interview exchanges, we investigate remembering as a category-bound activity, both a tensional and collaborative process of moral ratification of `survivor' as membership category. We propose the term re-membering to mean piecing together possible versions of survivor experiences in talk; these versions, offered by respondents and elicited by interviewers through questioning strategies, are epistemic claims to acquire the Holocaust as memory, or institutional History. We explore the accounting (...)
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  26.  37
    The Politics of Memory: History, Biography, and the (Re)-Emergence of Generational Literature in Germany.Hans-Peter Söder - 2009 - The European Legacy 14 (2):177-185.
    The existentialist philosopher Karl Jaspers is the father of a discourse on the spiritual consequences of the Holocaust. First addressed as the Schuldfrage (the question of guilt) by Jaspers immediately after the Second World War in his famous Heidelberg lecture, it has reappeared in various forms in German life and letters. Post-unification Germany has witnessed the valorization of the German experience of the Second World War. This ongoing re-evaluation has its antecedents in the generational literature of the 1970s and 1980s. (...)
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  27. Absent discourses: Paulo Freire and the dangerous memories of liberation.Peter McLaren & Peter Leonard - 1993 - In Peter McLaren & Peter Leonard (eds.), Paulo Freire: a critical encounter. New York: Routledge. pp. 1--7.
  28.  9
    Expressions of war in Australia and the Pacific: language, trauma, memory, and official discourse.Ruby Rong Wei - 2020 - Critical Discourse Studies:1-3.
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  29.  15
    Perception of the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar in Arab liberal analytics as a form of politics of memory.Maksym Kyrchanoff - 2023 - Sotsium I Vlast 1:74-84.
    Introduction. The author analyzes the informa- tional discourse of the World Cup in Qatar through the prism of collective historical memory. It is assumed that the Qatari Championship turned out to be both a sporting and political event. The article highlights the main problems that formed the information agenda, as well as the vectors and trajectories of the interpretation and perception of the Championship by liberal analysts and experts. Goal. The purpose of the article is to analyze the main (...)
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  30.  32
    Social Memory in Athenian Public Discourse: Uses and Meanings of the Past by Bernd Steinbock.Polly Low - 2014 - American Journal of Philology 135 (1):152-155.
  31.  6
    Funding Utopia: Utopian Studies and the Discourse of Academic Excellence.Adam Stock - 2024 - Utopian Studies 34 (3):517-527.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Funding Utopia: Utopian Studies and the Discourse of Academic ExcellenceAdam Stock (bio)As an academic field, there is in some important ways nothing special about utopian studies. Granted, our object of inquiry may look beyond the present toward what Ruth Levitas terms the Imaginary Reconstruction of Society, but we are still workers in what Darren Webb calls the “corporate-imperial” university.1 Webb argues that within the university we can at best (...)
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  32.  51
    'I saw a nightmare . . .': Violence and the construction of memory (soweto, June 16, 1976).Helena Pohlandt-McCormick - 2000 - History and Theory 39 (4):23–44.
    The protests on June 16, 1976 of black schoolchildren in Soweto against the imposition of Afrikaans as a medium of instruction in their schools precipitated one of the most profound challenges to the South African apartheid state. These events were experienced in a context of violent social and political conflict. They were almost immediately drawn into a discourse that discredited and silenced them, manipulating meaning for ideological and political reasons with little regard for how language and its absence-silences-further violated those (...)
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  33.  5
    The Master’s Albert Miracle: Notes about the Medieval Culture of Memory.Paweł Milcarek - 2019 - Philosophical Discourses 1:179-201.
    The Middle Ages takes over from antiquity the perception of memory as primarily a rhetoric skill needed for composing. Both the memory of the canon authors and the memory of mnemotechnics are a testament to the enormous significance that education and science were attached to remembering and reminding themselves. Unfortunately, so far we don't know enough about the great role played by monastic inspiration – deriving from liturgy and meditation – in shaping the culture of memory.
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  34.  4
    Historical Politics and the Obligation of Memory in a Philosophical Perspective.Anna Szklarska - 2019 - Philosophical Discourses 1:107-126.
    The paper follows the epistemic and ethical consequences of various models and assumptions of politics of memory. The author tries to answer the question about the relations between historical truth and politics of memory in the context of common good and respect towards ancestors and the events they were a part of. The paper also touches upon the issues of testimony, forgiveness and patriotism.
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  35.  22
    Rhetoric, death, and the politics of memory.James Martin - 2023 - Critical Discourse Studies 20 (5):477-490.
    This article develops a view of collective memory as a rhetorical practice with an intimate connection to death. Drawing on the philosophy of Jacques Derrida, I argue that memory is inhabited by death – the loss of a living presence which, nonetheless, is the very condition for recollection and communication. Memory can never retrieve presence, for time is discontinuous, disjointed rather than linear. Instead, memory is presented as an ‘impossible gift’, a form of inheritance that charges (...)
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  36.  42
    Homosexuality and hypermasculinity in the public discourse of the Russian Orthodox Church: an affect theoretical approach.Heleen Zorgdrager - 2013 - International Journal of Philosophy and Theology 74 (3):214-239.
    Since the late 1990s, the Russian Orthodox Church and several mainline Western Protestant churches have been at odds over homosexuality to such an extent that it has turned into a church-dividing issue. This article aims to find new openings for the ecumenical dialogue by examining how the ROC’s negative attitude toward same-sex relations has been influenced by cultural and historic factors. The analysis focuses on the affective dimension of the ROC’s discourse on homosexuality in important social documents and public speeches. (...)
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  37.  10
    Orality-if anything, Imagination, resistance in dialogue with the discourse of the historical ‘Other’.Gavin P. Hendricks - 2019 - HTS Theological Studies 75 (4):12.
    South Africa has a long history of orality deeply embedded in the archival memory of the ‘Other’ or the history of the poor and oppressed. Their untold stories, undocumented histories with displacing identities are how the historical ‘Other’ has been perceived by colonialism and the apartheid regime. The ‘Other’ or primary oral communities in the context of this article can be seen by a name, a face and a particular identity, namely, indigenous people. This article will engage the work (...)
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  38.  26
    Memory Changes in Healthy Older Adults.Declarative Memory - 2000 - In Endel Tulving (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Memory. Oxford University Press. pp. 395.
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  39.  70
    Memory for Emotional Events.Eyewitness Memory - 2000 - In Endel Tulving (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Memory. Oxford University Press. pp. 379.
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  40.  7
    Expressions of war in Australia and the Pacific: language, trauma, memory, and official discourse: edited by Amanda Laugesen and Catherine Fisher, Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2020, xvi+237pp., $99.99 (paperback), ISBN: 978-3-030-23889-6. [REVIEW]Ruby Rong Wei - 2022 - Critical Discourse Studies 19 (3):345-347.
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  41. In Memoriam, a Memorial Discourse in Honour of John Stuart Mill.Moncure Daniel Conway - 1873
     
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  42.  16
    The attorney as moral agent: A critique of Cohen.John M. Memory & I. I. I. Charles H. Rose - 2002 - Criminal Justice Ethics 21 (1):28-39.
  43.  18
    Reconstruction of Autobiographical Memories of Violent Sexual-Affective Relationships Through Scientific Reading on Love: A Psycho-Educational Intervention to Prevent Gender Violence.Sandra Racionero-Plaza, Leire Ugalde-Lujambio, Lídia Puigvert & Emilia Aiello - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
    Violence in sexual-affective relationships among teens and young people is recognized as a social, educational, and health problem that has increased worldwide in recent years. Educational institutions, as central developmental contexts in adolescence, are key in preventing and responding to gender violence through implementing successful actions. In order to scientifically support that task, the research reported in this article presents and discusses a psycho-educational intervention focused on autobiographical memory reconstruction that proved to be successful in raising young women’s critical (...)
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  44.  20
    The attorney as moral agent: A critique of Cohen.John M. Memory & Charles H. Rose - 2002 - Criminal Justice Ethics 21 (1):28-39.
  45.  7
    Memory and forgiveness. Soteriological discourse and literature.Adam Regiewicz - 2019 - Philosophical Discourses 1:27-36.
    In reflection concerning the study of literature, both categories, memory and forgiveness, are quite frequently contrasted. Literature, which activates memory, is perceived as a tool of settling the past. In this perspective, it takes the position opposite to that of forgiveness, which requires that 'one does not seek redress'. Using the example of the film bearing the title of The Tale, the author attempts to consider the conflict between a writer's duty to remember and the Christian appeal for (...)
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  46.  28
    Truth or lies? Selective memories, imagings, and representations of chief Albert John luthuli in recent political discourses.Jabulani Sithole & Sibongiseni Mkhize - 2000 - History and Theory 39 (4):69–85.
    Individuals, organizations, and institutions adopt prominent people as political symbols for a variety of reasons. They then produce conflicting memories and images of their chosen symbols. In this article we argue that multiple representations of celebrated public figures should not only be viewed in terms of a choice between "truths" and "lies." Using the case of Chief Albert Luthuli, the president of the African National Congress from 1952 to 1967, we show that secrets and silences about aspects of his political (...)
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  47.  12
    Referential Form and Memory for the Discourse History.Si On Yoon, Aaron S. Benjamin & Sarah Brown-Schmidt - 2021 - Cognitive Science 45 (4):e12964.
    The way we refer to things in the world is shaped by the immediate physical context as well as the discourse history. But what part of the discourse history is relevant to language use in the present? In four experiments, we combine the study of task‐based conversation with measures of recognition memory to examine the role of physical contextual cues that shape what speakers perceive to be a part of the relevant discourse history. Our studies leverage the differentiation effect, (...)
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  48. Discourse influences on memory for visual forms.D. Wilkesgibbs & P. H. Kim - 1991 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 29 (6):507-507.
     
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  49.  43
    Integrating music into intellectual history: Nineteenth-century art music as a discourse of agency and identity: John E. Toews.John E. Toews - 2008 - Modern Intellectual History 5 (2):309-331.
    Few intellectual historians of nineteenth-century Europe would deny that the tradition of art music that evolved between the revolutionary watershed at the end of the eighteenth century and the international wars and domestic convulsions of the first half of the twentieth century—a body of musical works from Haydn and Mozart to Mahler and Strauss that has been passed down to us in canonized form as the “imaginary museum” of “classical music” —was an enormously significant dimension of European cultural and intellectual (...)
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  50.  16
    Presentations at the Annual Meeting of the Neuroethics Society: An Index of Online Abstracts Available at Bioethics. net.Memory Manipulation - 2009 - American Journal of Bioethics 9 (1):57-58.
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